Snow White A Tale Of Terror Review Guide
Young Lillian Hoffman (Monica Keena) watches her mother die in childbirth. Years later, her grieving father (a wasted Sam Neill) marries the icy, beautiful Lady Claudia (Sigourney Weaver), a woman whose obsession with bearing a son is rivaled only by her jealous fixation on Lillian’s youth. When a family tragedy unleashes Claudia’s darkest impulses—aided by a supernatural, blood-thirsty mirror—Lillian flees into the dark forest. There, she finds refuge not with seven cheerful miners, but with a clan of outcast, feral prospectors (led by a ruggedly kind Vincent Perez). The final act is less a ballroom dance and more a slasher-film siege.
Forget the singing bluebirds, the whistling dwarfs, and the apple that comes with a handy true-love’s-kiss loophole. Snow White: A Tale of Terror is the grim fairy tale your childhood bedtime stories warned you about—only after you’d grown up and stopped sleeping with the lights on. snow white a tale of terror review
Snow White: A Tale of Terror is uneven, occasionally melodramatic, and its production values sometimes betray its made-for-cable origins (it debuted on Showtime). But it is never boring, and it is never safe. It understands the primal horror at the heart of the fairy tale: the terror of a parent who sees you not as a child, but as a rival. The film earns its "Terror" with a capital T. Young Lillian Hoffman (Monica Keena) watches her mother
For fans of The Company of Wolves , Neil Gaiman’s Snow, Glass, Apples , or anyone who wishes the Evil Queen had actually won a few rounds, this is essential viewing. Just don’t watch it alone. And definitely don’t look into any mirrors afterward. There, she finds refuge not with seven cheerful